It was also an age of poetry, distinguished by the names of
Kalidasa, Banabhatta, and the Jain Ravikirti, creating that richness of imagery
and allusion that was afterwards to clothe Hinduism with puranic lore.
Buddhist art now assumes the aspect of calm which always
rises out of the blending of the spirit with matter, in a repose where neither
attempts to overwhelm the other, and thus becomes akin to the classic ideal of
the Greeks, whose pantheism led them to a similar expression. Sculpture is, par
excellence, the form best adapted to this conception, and the stone Buddhas
of the Tin Tal in Ellora, though deprived of the plaster mouldings with which
they were originally covered, are beautiful, with a self-contained grandeur and
harmony of proportion. In them we find the sources of inspiration of the Tâng
and Nara sculptures.
The China of the Tâng dynasty (618 to 907 A.D.), enriched by the fresh Tartar
which, in the eighth century, resulted in the creation of
the present Japanese alphabet.
The memory of the wonderful enthusiasm that was born of
this continental fusion of the moment survives to this day in Japan, in a quaint folk-story of three travellers meeting in Loyang. One came from India, one from Japan, and one from the Celestial soil itself. "But we meet here," said
the last, "as if to make a fan, of which China represents the paper, you
from India the radiating sticks, and our Japanese guest the small but necessary
pivot!"
This was an age of toleration, as may always be expected
wherever there is a permeation of the Indian spirit, when in China Confucians,
Taoists, and Buddhists were equally honoured, when the Nestorian fathers were
allowed to spread their cult, as the Choan tablets attest, and when
Zoroastrians were permitted to establish their fire-worship in the important
cities
of the empire, leaving traces of Byzantine and Persian influence
in Chinese decorative art - in the same temper which in India made Yasovardhan and the Siladitya of Kanauj honour Brahmins, Jains, and Buddhists equally.
Thus the three streams of Chinese thought flow side by side, and Toshimi,
Ritaihaku, and Omakitsu, who represent the poetic ideals of these three rival
conceptions, express also, none the less, the grand harmony of the Tang period,
whose assimilative idea is so early expressed through Bunchusi, the teacher of
Gicho, chief adviser of Taiso himself. This harmony foreshadows the
Neo-Confucianism of the succeeding Sung dynasty in China (960 to 1280 A.D.), when Confucians, Taoists, and Buddhists together became a single national completeness.
Buddhism, the predominating impulse of the period, was, of
course, that of the second Indian (monastic) phase. Gensho (Hiouen-Tsang) was a
pupil of Mitrasena,
[paragraph continues] Adaptation, which is Sakya-Muni himself.
As the best existing specimen of the time we shall refer to
the gigantic Roshana of the Riumonsan, which was mentioned before. This statue,
similar in type to the Buddhas of Ellora, is more than sixty feet high, and
towers in great magnificence against the rocky precipice of the wonderful
hillside of Riumonsan, with a foaming torrent at its foot.
Another Roshana Buddha of stone is to be seen on the
Yangtse below Tobaro, near Kakoken. It is cut out of a single rock, a mountain
in itself, and its size may be imagined from the fact that a large pine tree
has grown in such a way as to take the place, without any apparent incongruity,
of one of the spiral lines of the head-dress. It is sitting on a lotus daïs in
the usual style, and as it is cut out of red sand-stone, most of the features
have been effaced, though even in its original state it must have been
difficult to study,
in 710 to found on the wider plains of the Yamato a new
capital, now known as the town of Nara. This city became the great Buddhist
centre, and the strength of its hierarchy was enough later to threaten the
throne and the nobility.
Dosho, a Japanese monk, had become a personal pupil of
Gensho (Hiouen-Tsang) in Choan, and returned again to Japan in the year 677. It was through him, and again through Giogi, in the middle of the eighth
century, that we were able to introduce the Hosso and Kegon sects, and thus
incorporate the ideas, and begin to share in the general development of the new
form of the Northern movement.
It is easy to understand, therefore, that the art of the Nara period is reflected from that of the early Tâng dynasty, and has even a direct
connection with its prototype in India; for many Indian artists are recorded as
having crossed over at this
work, in spite of the cramped space which the present
building covering it allows to the pilgrim's view. The original building was
forty-five feet higher and eighty feet longer than the present.
We owe the idea of the statue to the Emperor Shomu and his
great Empress Komio, in consultation with Giogi. This great monk travelled
through the length and breadth of Japan, bearing that proclamation of the Sovereign
which announces the project of the great Roshana Buddha of Nara, and then adds,
"It is our desire that each peasant shall have the right to add his
handful of clay and his strip of grass to the mighty figure," which, we
must remember, was intended to be the centre of the Buddhist universe. We can
still see, on the petals of the lotus daïs, the various Buddhistic worlds
chased with great delicacy.
The Emperor, who called himself publicly "Slave of the
Trinity," i.e. the Buddha, the Law, and the Church, assisted
at Nara, which vied with each other in gorgeousness, that
of Saidaiji is noted for its elaborate architecture, surrounded as it is by
golden phoenixes with bells in their mouths. People thought it the work of
magic, and worthy to be the palace of a dragon king. They ordered one monastery
and one nunnery to be erected in each province of the country, the sites of
which are now to be seen from the extreme end of Kiushu to the north of Mutsu.
The Empress Komio was highly instrumental in extending the
work of Shomu after his death, and this with the help of her daughter Koken,
who was the next to ascend the throne. The nobility of soul of this great
Empress-Mother may be felt even in one of her simplest poems, when, speaking of
offering flowers to the Buddha, she says, "If I pluck them, the touch of
my hand will defile, therefore standing in the meadows as they are I offer
these wind-blown flowers to the Buddhas
of the past, the present, and the future;" or again,
in an outburst of passionate enthusiasm, "The sound of the tools that are
raising the image of Buddha let it resound in Heaven! Let it rend the earth
asunder! For the sake of the fathers. For the sake of the mothers. For the sake
of all mankind." This is the same spirit of grandeur that utters itself in
the odes of Hitomaru and other Manyo poets of the Nara period.
The Empress Koken, again, with her masculine mind, was
further helpful to the progress of Buddhist art. On one occasion, when the
statue of the guardian King Saidaiji was cast, and when, through some mishap,
the work failed to succeed, she is said to have personally directed the pouring
of molten bronze, which completed the casting.
The colossal Kwannon of Sangatsudo, on whose head is to be
seen a silver Amida, ornamented with amber, pearls, and various precious
stones, is a statue
which ought also to be mentioned amongst the works of this
period.
The pictorial art of Nara - as seen in the wall-paintings
of Horiuji, which we conclude to be the work of the beginning of the eighth
century - is of the highest merit, and shows what the Japanese genius had been
able to add, even to the fine workmanship of the wall-painting of the Ajanta
caves. A landscape in the imperial collection at Nara, painted on the leather
bandage of a musical instrument called the biwa (evidently from the
Indian "vina"), is so different from the Buddhist style, both in
spirit and in execution, as to give us a glimpse into the delicate feeling of
the Laoist school of painting under the Tâng dynasty.
This imperial treasure-house (Shosoin) is also remarkable,
containing as it does the personal belongings of the Emperor Shomu and his
Empress Komio, which their daughter presented to the Roshana Buddha after their
deaths, and which